Although in the last forty years, the short story has
been characterized first by experimentation and then by attenuation, Alice
Munro has continued to go her own way, so confident of the nature of the short
story and her control of the form that she needs to observe no trends nor imitate
no precursors. Certainly she does not write in a vacuum, clearly aware of those
short-story masters who have preceded her--Chekhov, Turgenev, Eudora Welty,
Flannery O'Connor, Raymond Carver--but Munro has found her own unique rhythm
and controls it consummately.
There is always something mysterious and
unspeakable in Munro's stories, even though there is never the cryptic
compression of much late twentieth century short fiction. In an almost
novelistic fashion, as if she had all the time in the world, Munro lovingly
lingers on her characters and seldom misses the opportunity to register an
arresting image. But a Munro story is deceptive; it lulls the reader into a
false sense of security in which time seems to comfortably stretch out like
everyday reality, only to suddenly turn and tighten so intensely that the
reader is left breathless.
Book publishers usually consider short
stories the work of the beginner—M.F.A. finger-exercises they reluctantly agree
to publish only if they can promise on the flyleaf that the writer is
“currently working on a novel.” This commercial capitulation to the fact that
most readers prefer novels to short stories--along with the assumption that a
big work of fiction is more important than a collection of small ones--is so
powerful and pervasive that few writers are able to resist it. That Alice
Munro, who has been able to resist it for so many collections of short stories,
has become one of the most highly praised writers of the last half of the
twentieth century should therefore go a long way toward redeeming the neglected
short form. When her one novel, Lives of
Girls and Women was called “only a collection of short stories,” she wasn’t
bothered, saying she didn’t feel that a novel was any step up from a short
story. To her credit, she has never wavered from that judgment.
With remarkable unanimity, reviewers,
critics, and fellow authors agree that Alice Munro is the best short-story
writer in the world today, often justifying this assessment by arguing that the
numerous characters and multiplicity of events in her stories make them somehow
novelistic. However, Munro has always insisted that she does not write as a
novelist does, that when she is writing a short story she gets a kind of
tension she needs, like pulling on a rope attached to some definite place,
whereas with a novel, everything goes “flabby.” Characters and events don’t
really matter in her stories, she says, for they are subordinated to an overall
“climate” or “mood.” In Munro’s best work, the hidden story of emotion and
secret life, communicated by atmosphere and tone, is always about something
more enigmatic and unspeakable than the story generated by characters and what
happens next. Her greatest stories simply do not communicate as novels do.
Alice Munro has probably been asked “Why
do you write short stories?” so many times that she is tired of hearing it,
especially since lurking behind the question is the corollary rebuke, “Why
don’t you write novels?” The most common reason she has given, the one that
Raymond Carver once related, is the practical one of spousal and parental
responsibility. Carver liked to tell the story of being in a Laundromat in Iowa
City waiting for a dryer and being close to frustrating tears as he realized
that the greatest influence on his career was that he had two children and
would always find himself in a position of “unrelieved responsibility and
permanent distraction” (Call if You Need
Me 98). In a 1986 interview, after the publication of Progress of Love,
Munro replied to this increasingly impertinent question: “I never intended to
be a short-story writer. I started writing them because I didn’t have time to
write anything else—I had three children” (Rothstein).
Certainly, domestic duties may help
explain why authors like Carver and Munro—two of the greatest short-story
writers in the latter half of the twentieth century—initially wrote pieces of
fiction that they could complete in stolen blocks of time. But it does not
explain why they continued to write short stories when they had more time and
when their publishers kept hounding them for a novel.
The pressure on writers by agents,
editors, and critics to abandon the short story as soon as possible and do
something serious with their lives, such as write a novel, is unrelenting. This
narrative bias that bigger is better persists in spite of the fact that the
faithful few who have ignored it are among the most critically acclaimed
writers of the twentieth century: Anton Chekhov, Jorge Luis Borges, Flannery
O'Connor, Grace Paley, Raymond Carver, Andre Dubus, and Alice Munro. Munro said
back in 1986 that originally she planned to write a few stories to get some
practice and then to write novels, but “I got used to writing stories, so I saw
my material that way, and now I don’t think I’ll ever write a novel”
(Rothstein).
The demand of household chores, although
certainly not a trivial reason for choosing to write short stories, does not
have enough explanatory power to satisfy the critic. On the other hand, Munro’s
notion that there is “a short-story way” of seeing reality is a genre issue
with significant critical implications. And perhaps one way to try to
understand some of the significant characteristics of the short story form is
to explore the beliefs and practices of one writer who has always seen her
material in “a short story way.”
Munro once said, “I don’t understand where
the excitement is supposed to come in a novel, and I do in a short story”
(Rothstein). On another occasion, she used a metaphor to describe this
short-story excitement. “I can get a kind of tension when I’m writing a short
story, like I’m pulling on a rope and I know where the rope is attached. With a
novel, everything goes flabby.” Munro says she doesn’t seem to be able to write
in any other way. “I guess that’s why I don’t write a novel. God knows I still
keep trying. But there always comes a point where everything seems to be
getting really flat. You don’t feel the tension…I don’t feel this pulling on
the rope to get to the other side that I have to feel.” Munro added, “People
have suggested this is because I want to be able to manage everything and that
I fear loss of control…. I have to agree that I fear loss of control. But I
don’t think it’s anything as simple as that” (Struthers 14-15).
Munro explained that when she reads a
story she does not take it up at the beginning and follow it like a road “with
views and neat diversions along the way.” Rather, for her, reading a story is
like moving through a house, making connections between one enclosed space and
another. Consequently, Munro declares, “When I write a story I want to make a
certain kind of structure, and I know the feeling I want to get from being
inside that structure.” She admits that
the word “feeling” is not very precise, but that if she tries to be more
intellectually respectable she will be dishonest (“What is Real” 224).
Munro used the term “feeling” again when
Geoff Hancock asked her if the meaning of a story is more important to her than
the event. “What happens as event doesn’t really much matter,” Munro replied. “When
the event becomes the thing that matters, the story isn’t working too well.
There has to be a feeling in the story” (81). Rather than being concerned with
character or cause-and-effect consequence, Munro says she wants the “characters
and what happens subordinated to a climate,” by which, she says, she means
something like “mood” (Hancock 81). When Hancock asked Munro about meaning and
intent in her stories, she said, “What I like is not to really know what the
story is all about. And for me to keep trying to find out.” What makes a story
interesting, she says, is the “thing that I don’t know and that I will discover
as I go along” (84). When Hancock says he thinks she gives “voice to our secret
selves,” she agrees emphatically, “That’s absolutely what I think a short story
can do” (76).
I will try to illustrate in what follows
that the aspects of Munro’s “specific kind of
creative activity”—“tension,” “control,”
“mood,” “emotion,” “mystery,” “secret self,” and the refusal to
explain—underlie the complexity of her short stories in particular and the
short story in general. What I wish to argue is that the complexity of Alice
Munro’s short stories is not the result of the mere multiplicity of characters
and the addition of a social, ideological, or historical context, but rather
the result of seeing the world in a uniquely “short story way.”
As I have argued earlier in this book, the
short story’s “way of seeing” is like that which Ernst Cassirer says
characterizes perceiving the world in a mythic way, for it means not
distinguishing objective characters, but rather “physiognomic characters.” When
Munro says she is primarily interested in “emotion,” she echoes Cassirer when
he says that within mythical perception “Whatever is seen or felt is surrounded
by a special atmosphere” (Essay on Man 77).
In this realm, says Cassirer, we cannot speak of things as dead or indifferent
stuff, but all “objects are benign or malignant, friendly or inimical, familiar
or uncanny, alluring and fascinating or repellent and threatening.”
Rather than plot or ideology, what unifies
the short story is an atmosphere, a certain tone of significance. As Alberto
Moravia has noted, when Chekhov tried his hand at a novel he was less gifted
and convincing than he was with the short story. If you look at Chekhov’s long
stories, says Moravia, you feel a lack of something that makes a novel, even a
bad novel, a novel, for in them Chekhov dilutes his “concentrated lyrical
feeling with superfluous plots lacking intrinsic necessity.” The very qualities
that make him a great short story writer become defects when Chekhov tackles a
novel. Characters in short stories are the product of “lyrical intuitions,”
says Moravia; short stories get their “complexity from life and not from the
orchestration of some kind of ideology” (150). The short story focuses on an
experience under the influence of a particular mood, or, as Munro would say
“emotion,” and therefore depends more on tone than on plot as a principle of
unity.
So glad your girl won! It is a treasure for all of us.
ReplyDeleteCould you give some wisdom on the writer, Tom Perrotta and his book, Nine Inches Stories....thanks!
ReplyDeleteI love the short story genre and love reading your blog. Thanks for posting excerpts from your book. I just bought it on Amazon and am looking forward to reading it!
ReplyDeleteI've been reading your blog for close to a year now, and I wanted to thank you for helping me to understand the short story a lot better - looking forward to buy your new book!
ReplyDelete'I Am Your Brother' arrived yesterday. I've started reading it and am enjoying it immensely. Such a wealth of knowledge! I can't help thinking of Australian short story writers who illustrate some of the points you make, for example when you talk about how 'the form seems to thrive best in societies where there is a diversity or fragmentation of values and people'. This perfectly applies to the stories of Henry Lawson.
ReplyDeleteIf I could make a technical point - I bought the print version, which I was happy to do - this is not a quibble - but I would have bought an epub version if there had been one, or if I'd been able to find it.
Am I right in thinking the only electronic version is for kindle?
I only ask this question because, as you know, I am new to ebook publishing as well, and I think it's a good idea to have both epub and mobi versions available.
Dorothy, it's easy to download the free Calibre program and use it to convert mobi files (the Kindle format) to epub ones. Calibre is very reliable, and heaps of people use it all the time, but if you have any problems, just email me.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your help, Lee. i will do this.
ReplyDeleteThanks much, for buying my book, Dorothy. I hope it is readable and useful to you. I decided not to make the book available on Noon, Sony, Smashwords, etc. at first in order to take advantage of the Kindle Select program and Koll program. I may change my mind when the 90 day enrollment period is up.
ReplyDeleteThanks also to Lee for the advice about the Calibre program for converting Kindle mobi files.
Also, one query to Dorothy: I just read Janet Frame's posthumous collection MY Father and the King. The stories seem mostly simple to me. Any thoughts of your own about her stories or Frame's reputation in Australia and New Zealand?
I have to say, to my embarrassment, that I am more familiar with Frame's novels than her short stories. I will follow this up. As to her reputation, she is much loved in my part of the world.
ReplyDeleteYou could say that the novel 'Owls Do Cry' is written in a short story kind of way...
Thanks, Dorothy. And thanks very much for the generous review on Amazon. I so much appreciate it.
ReplyDelete